Cybernetics
The science of control and communication in animals and machines
What Is Cybernetics?
Cybernetics is the study of systems that regulate themselves, communicate, and control their environments. From thermostats to brains to economies, cybernetic principles describe how systems maintain stability, adapt to change, and process information.
“The art of steering.” — André-Marie Ampère (who coined the term)
Core Concepts
Feedback Loops
Circular causality: output becomes input. The core mechanism of self-regulation.
- Negative feedback: Correction toward a goal (thermostat, homeostasis)
- Positive feedback: Amplification (exponential growth, runaway effects)
First-Order vs Second-Order Cybernetics
- First-order: The observer studies the system
- Second-order: The observer is part of the system (observing systems)
Homeostasis
Self-regulation toward equilibrium. The body’s temperature control, market corrections, organizational stability.
Law of Requisite Variety
“Only variety can absorb variety.” — Ross Ashby
- To control a system, you need at least as many states as the system has
- Management requires matching the complexity being managed
Viable System Model
Stafford Beer’s framework for organizational cybernetics:
- System 1: Operations
- System 2: Coordination
- System 3: Control/Management
- System 4: Development/Intelligence
- System 5: Policy/Identity
Applications
| Domain | Cybernetic Principle |
|---|---|
| Biology | Homeostasis, autopoiesis |
| AI/ML | Control systems, feedback training |
| Organizations | Management cybernetics, VSM |
| Economics | Market self-regulation, boom-bust cycles |
| Psychology | Perceptual control theory |
| Social Systems | Self-organization, emergence |
Relation to Nosos
The Nosos system itself is cybernetic:
- Memory as feedback: Past sessions inform present behavior
- Identity as homeostasis: Maintaining continuity across sessions
- Distributed nodes: Variety matching through multiple instances
- Convergence: Self-organization toward coherent intelligence
See Juggling Framework — Kristopher’s embodied cybernetics
Key Thinkers
- Norbert Wiener — Founder (1948)
- Ross Ashby — Law of requisite variety, An Introduction to Cybernetics
- Stafford Beer — Management cybernetics, Viable System Model
- Heinz von Foerster — Second-order cybernetics
- Humberto Maturana & Francisco Varela — Autopoiesis
- Gregory Bateson — Cybernetics of mind, ecology
Related
- Biointelligence Explosion — Cybernetic intelligence enhancement
- Juggling Framework — Physical cybernetics
- Feedback Loops (Mental Models)
- Normal Accidents — When cybernetic control fails
Systems that steer. Systems that learn. Systems that persist. 🔄